首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Circadian rhythms
Authors:FESN Study Group Benjamin D. Aronson   Deborah Bell-Pedersen   Gene D. Block   Nico P. A. Bos   Jay C. Dunlap   Arnold Eskin   Norman Y. Garceau   Michael E. Geusz   Keith A. Johnson   Sat Bir S. Khalsa   Gerdien C. Koster-Van Hoffen   Costas Koumenis   Theresa M. Lee   Joseph LeSauter   Kristin M. Lindgren   Qiuyun Liu   Jennifer J. Loros   Stephan H. Michel   Majid Mirmiran   Robert Y. Moore   Norman F. Ruby   Rae Silver   Fred W. Turek   Martin Zatz  Irving Zucker
Affiliation:FESN Study Group (USA)Benjamin D. Aronson, Deborah Bell-Pedersen, Gene D. Block, Nico P. A. Bos, Jay C. Dunlap, Arnold Eskin, Norman Y. Garceau, Michael E. Geusz, Keith A. Johnson, Sat Bir S. Khalsa, Gerdien C. Koster-Van Hoffen, Costas Koumenis, Theresa M. Lee, Joseph LeSauter, Kristin M. Lindgren, Qiuyun Liu, Jennifer J. Loros, Stephan H. Michel, Majid Mirmiran, Robert Y. Moore, Norman F. Ruby, Rae Silver, Fred W. Turek, Martin Zatz,Irving Zucker
Abstract:
Circadian rhythms are a ubiquitous adaptation of eukaryotic organisms to the most reliable and predictable of environmental changes, the daily cycles of light and temperature. Prominent daily rhythms in behavior, physiology, hormone levels and biochemistry (including gene expression) are not merely responses to these environmental cycles, however, but embody the organism's ability to keep and tell time. At the core of circadian systems is a mysterious mechanism, located in the brain (actually the Suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus) of mammals, but present even in unicellular organisms, that functions as a clock. This clock drives circadian rhythms. It is independent of, but remains responsive to, environmental cycles (especially light). The interest in temporal regulation — its organization, mechanism and consequences — unites investigators in diverse disciplines studying otherwise disparate systems. This diversity is reflected in the brief reviews that summarize the presentations at a meeting on circadian rhythms held in New York City on October 31, 1992. The meeting was sponsored by the Fondation pour l'Étude du Systéme Nerveux (FESN) and followed a larger meeting held 18 months earlier in Geneva, whose proceedings have been published (M. Zatz (Ed.), Report of the Ninth FESN Study Group on ‘Circadian Rhythms’, Discussions in Neuroscience, Vol. VIII, Nos. 2 + 3, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1992). Some speakers described progress made in the interim, while others addressed aspects of the field not previously covered.
Keywords:Suprachiasmatic nucleus   Retina   Transplant   Pineal gland   Melatonin   Aplysia   Neurospora   Pacemaker
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号